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- Han Na Jang, Taeho Kim, Ah Young Jung, Beom Hee Lee, Mi-Sun Yum, and Tae-Sung Ko.
- Department of Pediatrics, Asan Medical Center Children's Hospital, University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
- Medicine (Baltimore). 2021 Nov 24; 100 (47): e27949e27949.
AbstractFOXG1, located at chromosome 14q12, is critical for brain development, and patients with FOXG1 mutation exhibit developmental encephalopathy with high phenotypic variability, known as FOXG1 syndrome. Here, we report 3 cases of FOXG1 syndrome that presented with infantile hypotonia and microcephaly.A total of 145 children with developmental delay and/or hypotonia were evaluated by whole-exome sequencing (WES) in the pediatric neurology clinic and medical genetics center at Asan Medical Center Children's Hospital, from 2017 to 2019. Each FOXG1 mutation was confirmed by Sanger sequencing. The clinical findings of each patient with FOXG1 mutation were reviewed.WES identified de-novo, pathogenic, and heterozygous FOXG1 mutations in 3 of 145 patients in our patient cohort with developmental delay and/or hypotonia. The characteristics of brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were reported as callosal anomaly, decrease in frontal volume, fornix thickening, and hypoplastic olfactory bulbs. A phenotype-genotype correlation was demonstrated as a patient with a novel missense mutation, c.761A > C (p.Tyr254Ser), in the forkhead domain had better outcome and milder brain abnormalities than the other 2 patients with truncating mutation in the Groucho binding domain site, c.958delC (p.Arg320Alafs), or N-terminal domain, c.506dup (p.Lys170GlnfsThe). Importantly, all 3 patients had hypoplastic olfactory bulbs on their brain MRI, which is a distinct and previously unrecognized feature of FOXG1 syndrome.This is the first report of FOXG1 syndrome in a Korean population; this condition accounts for 2% (3 of 145 patients) of our patient cohort with developmental delays and/or hypotonia. Our report contributes to understanding this extremely rare genetic condition in the clinical and genetic perspectives.Copyright © 2021 the Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.
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